139 lines
9.3 KiB
Plaintext
139 lines
9.3 KiB
Plaintext
JACK AND THE BEANSTALK
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Once upon a time there was a poor widow who lived with her son Jack in a
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little house. Their wealth consisted solely of a milking cow. When the cow had
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grown too old, the mother sent Jack to sell it. On his way to the market, the
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boy met a stranger.
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"I will give you five magic beans for your cow," the stranger offered. Jack
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was unsure and hesitated for a while but then, enticed by the idea of such an
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extraordinary deal, he decided to accept. When he returned home, his mother
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was furious and reprimanded him sternly:
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"You fool! What have you done? We needed the money to buy a calf. Now we
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don't have anything and we are even poorer." Jack felt guilty and sad.
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"Only a fool would exchange a cow for five beans," his mother fumed.
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Then, at the height of her exasperation, she threw the five beans out of
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the window and sent Jack to bed with no dinner.
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The morning after, when he stepped outside, Jack saw an amazing sight. A
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gigantic beanstalk, reaching far into the clouds, had grown overnight.
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"The beans must have really been magic," Jack thought happily. Being very
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curious, the boy climbed the plant and once he reached the top of the stalk he
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found himself over the clouds.
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While looking around in amazement, Jack saw a huge castle of grey stone.
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"I wonder who lives there," he thought. Jack was very surprised to see a
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path leading to the castle. He cautiously stepped on the clouds and, when he
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saw that they held him up, he walked to the castle. As he stood in front of
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the huge gate, his curiosity increased. He knocked several times on the
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gigantic door, but no one came to open it. Jack noticed that the door wasn't
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locked. With great effort, he was able to push it until it creaked open.
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"What are you doing here?" a thundering voice asked. The biggest woman he
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had ever seen was scowling at him. Jack could only mutter:
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"I am lost. May I have something to eat? I am very hungry." The woman, who
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did not have children, looked at him a little more kindly: "Come in, quick. I
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will give you a bowl of milk. But be careful because my husband, the ogre,
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eats children. If you hear him coming, hide at once."
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Jack was shaking with fear but, nonetheless, he went inside. The milk the
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woman gave him was very good and Jack had almost finished drinking it when
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they heard a tremendous noise. The ogre was home.
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"Fee fl fo fum! I smell the blood of an Englishman!" the ogre shouted.
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"Hide, quick!" the woman whispered, pushing Jack into the oven.
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"Do I smell a child in this room?" the ogre asked suspiciously, snifflng
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and looking all around.
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"A child?" the woman repeated. "You see and hear children everywhere.
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That's all you ever think about. Sit down and I'll make your dinner." The
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ogre, still grumbling, filled a jug of wine and drank it all with his dinner.
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After having counted again and again all the gold pleces of his treasure,
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the ogre fell asleep with his feet propped up on the table. After a little
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while, his thundering snoring echoed throughout the castle. The ogre's wife
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went to prepare the ogre's bed and Jack, who had sneaked out ot the oven, saw
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the gold pieces on the table and filled a little bag full of them.
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"I hope he won't see me, otherwise he'll eat me whole, Jackq thought while
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shivering with fear. Jack's heart was beating faster, not just faster because
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he feared the ogre but because he was very excited. Thanks to all the gold
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coins, he and his mother would be rich. Jack ran down the path over the
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clouds.
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Jack arrived at the top of the giant beanstalk and began to descend as
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quickly as possible, hanging on the leaves and the branches. When he finally
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reached the ground, he found his mother waiting for him. The poor woman had
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been worried sick since his disappearance.
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She had been frightened by the giant beanstalk. When she saw Jack come down
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and then triumphantly hold up the bag full of gold, she burst out crying:
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"Where have you been, my son? Do you want me to die worrying? What kind of
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plant is this? What . . ." Jack cheerfully interrupted her, emptying the
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contents of the bag before her.
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"You see, I did the right thing exchanglng that cow for the magic beans.
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Now I'll tell you the whole story . . ."
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And Jack told his mother everything that had happened in detail. In the
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days that followed, the widow's humble house was made into a comfortable home.
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The gold pieces were spent to buy a lot of things Jack and his mother never
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had before. Mother and son were very happy. But as time went by, so did the
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money. When the last gold piece had been spent, Jack decided to go back to the
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castle above the clouds. This time the boy went inside through the kitchen and
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hid once again in the oven. Shortly after, the ogre came in and began to sniff
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about.
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"I smell children," he said to his wife. But since she had seen no one come
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in, she didn't pay any attention to him.
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After dinner, the ogre placed a hen on the table. The hen laid golden eggs.
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Jack saw the miraculous hen from a crack in the oven door. He waited for the
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ogre to fall asleep, jumped out of the oven, snatched the hen and ran out of
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the castle. The hen's squawking, however, woke up the ogre.
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"Thief! Thief!" he shouted. But Jack was already far away. Once again, he
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found his mother anxiously waiting for him at the foot of the beanstalk.
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"Is that all you stole? A hen?" she asked Jack, disappointed. But Jack ran,
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happy, to the courtyard.
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"Just wait," he said to his mother. As a matter of fact, a little while
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later the hen laid a golden egg and continued to lay such an egg every single
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day after that.
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By now, Jack and his mother were very wealthy. Their house was completely
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rebuilt. Teams of carpenters replaced the roof, added new rooms and elegant
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marble columns. Then they bought paintings, tapestries, Persian rugs, mirrors
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and many other beautiful fumishings. Their miserable shack was transformed
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into a luxurious home.
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Jack and his mother had not forgotten their previous years of poverty and
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deprivation. So they chose to welcome any traveller who needed food or
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shelter. But wealth doesn't always bring happiness. Jack's mother suddenly
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fell ill or so it seemed. But not one of the many doctors who visited her
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could discover what her illness was. The woman was sad, ate less and less and
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showed no interest in life. She rarely smiled, and then only when Jack was
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near to her. Her son tried to cheer her up, but nothing could save the mother
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from her slow but inevitable decline. Even a circus's famous clown, who had
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been invited especially for her entertainment, received only a sad greeting.
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Jack was desperate and didn't know what to do. All the hen's gold was not
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enough to make his mother well again. So he had another idea.
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"What if I went back to the ogre's castle? Maybe there I could find the
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answer," he thought. He shivered with fear thinking about the giant's huge
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hands and mouth, but the hope of helping his mother encouraged him to face the
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danger again. One evening he gathered all his courage and climbed once more
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the giant beanstalk. This time he entered the castle through an open window.
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He sneaked in the darkness to the kitchen and hid inside a huge pot until the
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following day. After dinner the ogre went to get his magic harp, an instrument
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that sang and played marvellous music. While listening to the harp's sweet
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melody, the ogre fell asleep. In his hiding place, Jack was captivated by the
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harp's song as well. When he finally heard the ogre snore loudly, he lifted
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the pot's lid and saw the extraordinary instrument: a golden harp.
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He quickly climbed on the table and ran away with the harp in his hands.
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The instrument woke up the ogre screaming:
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"Master, master! Wake up! A thief is taking me away!" The ogre woke up
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suddenly, was disorientated for a couple of seconds but then realized what was
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happening and began chasing Jack. The boy ran as fast as he could and the harp
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kept calling out.
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"Shut up! Shut up! If you'll play for me, you'll be happier," Jack kept
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telling it breathlessly. He finally arrived to where the leafy top of the
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beanstalk poked through the clouds. Jack crept along the ground and slipped
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down the stalk quietly. The harp did not make a sound and the ogre didn't see
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Jack go down the plant. When Jack got down to earth he called to his mother,
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"Look what I've brought you!" The harp began to play an enchanting melody
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and his mother smiled happlly.
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But up there in the clouds someone else had heard the harp's beautiful song
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and Jack soon realized with terror that the thick beanstalk was shaking under
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a very heavy weight. The ogre was coming down to earth!
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"Hide the harp and bring me an axe! I must chop down the plant before the
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ogre gets here," Jack said to his mother. They could already see the ogre's
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huge boots when the plant and the ogre finally crashed to the ground. The ogre
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fell down a cliff nearby. The ogre's wife never found out what had happened to
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her husband and as time passed Jack no longer felt in danger.
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The magical sound of the harp cured his mother's sadness and she was once
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again happy and cheerful. The hen kept on laying golden eggs. Jack's life had
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gone through a lot of changes since he had accepted the magic beans. But
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without his courage and his wit, he and his mother could never have found
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happiness.
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